Of late, there have been several conversations around the experience of bliss during meditation and satsang—both the bliss of nothing and the bliss of everything. In those moments, we feel we’ve finally ‘arrived,’ only to have the experience pass. Overlooking the unchanging Consciousness eternally present in both our experiences of nothing and everything, we try to regain that state of bliss. Instead of stopping to notice what sees the coming and going of the bliss, we embark on more doing: yoga, diet, meditation, bhajans, mindfulness, prayers, retreats, etc., hoping to tap into the bliss once more.

If the experience—the state of being—comes and goes, it is not us. We are not a state of being. We do not come and go. We are neither the bliss of everything nor the bliss of nothing. We are prior to all manifestations. We are This from which all life flows, in all Its states of expression, in every experience, good or bad.

Adyashanti in his book, The End of Your World, talks about being “drunk on emptiness,” when we mistake the nothingness for Truth, failing to also recognize the everythingness of Truth. Nothingness is the recognition as the first half of Nisargadatta Maharaj’s statement, “When I look inside and see that I am nothing that is wisdom.” If only emptiness is recognized, then Truth is not fully seen.

It is essential to follow through with the second half of Nisargadatta’s statement, “When I look outside and see that I am everything, that is love. Between these two, my life turns.” It is the eternal recognition as nothingness and everythingness simultaneously that characterizes awakening as Truth. Each facet of Truth is the whole. To paraphrase a statement by Adyashanti, “Nothing being and becoming everything while remaining nothing.”

The concepts of everythingness and nothingness are still limits mind grabs onto in its effort to understand what is beyond concepts. Yet, mind can never know Truth, as Truth is mind’s Creator.

When we find ourselves looking to recreate an experience, stop. Notice what sees the movement of seeking, notice from where the doing arises. Be This, move from This, experience from This.

In the search for Truth, it is often more productive to notice what is looking for Truth than to try to intellectually understand Truth.

A young sangha member, Paige Kies, recently expressed this recognition in a poem that she gave us permission to share:

The Ultimate Truth

I believe I was once

a patch of flowers alongside the road

I cannot recall my velvety head

but I do remember such forgetfulness of mine

brought forth laughter and smiles to us all

 

Perhaps I was a morning glory

Always the most beautiful sight

to observe at the beginning of our days

And my arms would have reached out to all

So my simple beauty could enhance

the wonderful radiance of all others

No- that isn’t quite right

 

Or how about a rose?

Those prickly thorns

Which sting and bite

Most certainly bring forth the nickname Scorpion grass

Ah but the petals….

They are too delicate to be the likes of me

For a single drop of poisonous sebum

creates a blackness—

marring such beauty

 

Then maybe I had been a Daisy

This I’m sure is a possibility

Orbiting petals focusing

On a centered sun full with the nectar of Life

However, this again

Seems not to be truth

For compared to the sun

I am a speck of dust

 

 

Yet, it seems to be

That I am truly the cosmos—

For matter is neither created

Nor destroyed

So a speck of dust

Is as frighteningly powerful

As the most predatory lifeforms

Which again…

I might have been

 

Yersinia pestis

Bdellovibrio

Dionaea muscipula

Periplaneta americana

Pterois

Naja

Otariinae

Panthera uncia

Orcinus orca

They all seem a suitable match

For a one who was once called me

 

Oh what does it matter

What I once was?

For all that has been

It is my present

That seems to matter most

If I were some flower

Or even a speck of dust

I shall, one day, return to those forms

But my futures….

They cannot stop what I am at this very moment

 

In an immediate sense I am Nothing

And being so said

I connect everything

If only I forget

Forget to have a presence of mind

And instead

Allow the presence of Everything

Unite with me as Nothing

 

For when this happens

I remember the word Myosotis

That’s what I was—

Once

But then again, there are so many others

That I embodied

Or will become

 

Such peace

Such tranquility do I find

From being Nothing

And being Everything…

From being One

And being All

 

Namaste, Steve and Bec

Beyond Bliss

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